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Student Activism Improves Relations Between Muslims and Non-Muslims Print E-mail
Tuesday, 17 October 2006

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

I grew up in Los Angeles, and the racial division in my high school was exactly 50 percent Caucasian, 50 percent East Asian. Needless to say, I did not come into contact with Islam on a regular basis. I didn’t even know much about it at all. All of this changed when I came to Georgetown.

Georgetown’s strong Muslim student community was enough to get my attention upon arriving on campus, and when I chose to live on the Hindu Living Floor during my sophomore year (located on the ground floor of Copley, where the Muslim Student Association’s prayer room is located) and participate in the South Asian Society’s Rangila dance show, I was suddenly thrust into contact with people from many different religious backgrounds to which I had never been previously exposed. A few of the people with whom I became very close were Muslims, and one of them became MSA President his senior year.

At first, I was utterly clueless about Muslim religious history and practice. But once I became slowly more exposed, it piqued my interest. Suddenly, I found myself signing up for more Islam courses (and eventually justifying it by declaring a Muslim-Christian Understanding certificate). Now, as a senior, I have even chosen to write my thesis in Asian Studies on tourism and its interaction with two minority groups in China: Tibetans and Muslims.

Why and how did this religion, to which I was so utterly ignorant about before college and to which I have no cultural or familial ties to, come to occupy such an important place in my undergraduate career?

First of all, it has to be the people. We all know that recent media portrayal of Muslims has painted an awful picture of Islam and its followers. Luckily, there are organizations like the Georgetown MSA that serve to tear that picture in half. Anyone who has participated in an MSA-sponsored event here on campus can attest to the openness and truly welcoming way in which anyone is accepted to learn and participate in the religion.

The MSA-sponsored Ramadan Fast-a-thon, which occurred last Wednesday, is a perfect example. Their eagerness to re-educate people about Islam and its values and to welcome anyone regardless of faith is easily seen when you walk into an event like the Fast-a-thon dinner, any iftar, or a prayer or education session in the prayer room.

Second, the religion itself has a natural pull. For anyone not previously exposed to it, simple self-study or taking a class or two opens up a world of experience. Being a student of history, I am very interested in how previous events have shaped the Muslim world today and right now I am taking a class on Islamic law and politics. Every time I enter that class, a new misconception clears in my mind — contrary to contemporary media views, Islam in its true, unadulterated sense is not spread via “the sword“ by forcing conversion, something absolutely forbidden in the Quran; it accepts all people of the Book who act morally as those who will be saved on Judgment Day.

Furthermore, Islam acknowledges all previous prophets as true messengers of God and even says that each world community has had a prophet. Now, as I get into the nitty-gritty of political organization in the classical period, more misconceptions about Islam’s true nature are being revealed — there is so much to learn that I don’t want to stop until I feel I have a true understanding of the religion.

My personal experiences with the members of the Georgetown MSA have led me to deeply respect them both on an individual and a group level. Together they are a group of people with an extremely strong sense of faith who live their lives by a moral code that amazes me. But on an individual level, an MSA member is just another Georgetown student like you or me. From this group have come some of my closest friends who have taught me about a religious outlook on life that is both new and different, but at the same time interestingly familiar.

Lauren McGaughy is a senior in the College.

Source: The Hoya (Georgetown University Newspaper)




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Readers have left 4 comments.
Kathy: Quote

This is a very well written article and it shows that if someone has an open mind, they can learn to understand the beliefs of others. The world is becoming a smaller place as travel is so easy these days and this should give us all the chance to understand one another.

I feel that if we stopped being influenced by the medias' opinions of Islam and opened our eyes we would see a little of what Lauren has seen in her University. This of course is a two way street and if the Muslims could open up their Mosques and other buildings to the general population a greater understanding of Islam could be seen and hopefully understood. No one is asking people to convert to Islam, only to open their eyes to the true Islam and the people of that Faith. Sadly what we are shown in the media are either the radical Muslims who portray their own, often distorted, version of Islam or the older generation ( no insult mean't here ) who perhaps because of language barriers are not as able to express their beliefs in a coherent way. I hear so many of our people saying what the Muslim beliefs are and I realise just how ignorant the majority of us really are when it comes to Islam. Again I do not say this in a derogatory way. Most people only know what they read or see on TV, most of which is negative. There are good and bad in every society but I wish that there was some way of telling our people even the basics of Islam so that they may be able to decide for themselves if they want to find out more. There will always be the ones who will criticise but I believe that if more people knew about the basic principles of Islam then there would be a better understanding and perhaps even some of that intergration the government talks about.

Yes, some will say that Muslims should learn about our beliefs and ways. I agree and I believe that this would happen if the dialog was opened. There is no need for anyone to change their culture etc. only to understand one anothers.
(1) 2006-10-17 12:12:27
A Former Labour Party Voter: Quote

Glad there is mention of the government run media. Hundreds of thousands of muslim civilian men women and children in Iraq alone are dead because of people like Brown, Blair, Straw, Blunket, Reid and the rest of the labourt Party.

Millions of muslims have suffered and continue to suffer and yet all the media wants to do is brainwash people about who we should think the extremist are.
(2) 2006-10-17 16:17:49
here here: Quote

see...this is WHY the Prophet (SAW) asked us to be patient in times of adversity and to remain steadfast to our Deen.

If we all lived as TRUE practicing muslims, i'm sure there would be far more experiences like this one.

thank you to Laura and to the Georgetown MSA for showing that all muslims do NOT behave as the media may portray.
(3) 2006-10-17 18:48:43
Lauren McGaughy: Quote

Thank you all for your praise on my article. It was a pleasure for me to write about my wonderful experiences with Georgetown's Muslim student community.
(4) 2006-11-30 17:36:28
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